Sunday, June 23, 2013

Each week, every team competes against every other team. If there are ten teams in the league, the team with the most points that week defeated everybody else, thus going 9-0. The team with the second-most points defeated eight other teams, but lost to one team, thus going 8-1. Yada Yada Yada, the team with the least points was defeated by everybody, thus going 0-9.

Weekly Scores:

Most points: 9-0

2nd: 8-1

3rd: 7-2

4th: 6-3

5th: 5-4

6th: 4-5

7th: 3-6

8th: 2-7

9th: 1-8

10th: 0-9

These are the wins and losses for the single week. For the season standings, wins and losses from every week continue to be added up. Each week, your wins and losses for that week are added to your wins and losses for the season total.

Teams scoring the same number of points in a single week have a tie, and a tie will be included in the standings for the week and the season.

2. Championship

The manager of the team with the MOST WINS for the season is declared the Hazelweird Champion.

1st tie-breaker: if two teams have the same number of wins, the team with the fewest losses (e.g., best winning percentage) is declared the Hazelweird Champion.

2nd tie-breaker: if two teams have the same number of wins and losses, the team with the most total points is declared the Hazelweird Champion.

AP Recognition: The team with the most total points for the season is recognized with an AP title. This is not a league championship, but recognition for a secondary accomplishment.

Playoff Cup: in weeks 14-17, we will have a 10-team playoff to determine the Playoff Cup. Seeds will be based on HW standings going into week 14. In Week 14, there will be play-in games, followed by a conventional eight-team bracket in Weeks 15, 16, and 17.

Simple bracket

Week 14: 8 vs 9 and 7 vs 10 (play in games)

Week 15: 1 vs (8vs9); 4 vs 5; 3 vs 6; 2 vs (7vs10)

Week 16: Semi-finals (winners tradition bracket style)

Week 17: The Playoff Cup Champion crowned

The Playoff Cup is not the league champion, but is awarded recognition for a secondary accomplishment.

3. Scoring

Offense

The Hazelweird League uses fractional scoring for yardage.

Passing Yard: 50 yards per point

Passing TD: 3 points

Rushing Yards: 10 yards per point

Rushing TD: 6 points

Receiving Yards: 10 yards per point

Receiving TD: 6 points

KR or PR TD: 6 points

2-Point Conversion: 2 points

Offensive Fumble Return TD: 6 points

Kicking

Field Goal: 3 points

PAT Made: 1 point

Defense/Special Teams

Sack: 1 point

Interception: 1 point

Fumble Recovery: 1 point

Blocked Kick: 1 point

4th Down Stop: 1 point

TD: 6 points

Safety: 4 points

KR or PR TD: 6 points

0 points allowed: 6 points

1-6 points allowed: 4 points

7-13 points allowed: 2 points

4. Roster and Lineup

Rosters consist of 16 positions.There are NINE positions required to fill a starting lineup: QB, WR, WR, RB, TE, W/T, W/R, K, D. While you are required to draft 16 players during the draft, you are not required to draft all nine starting positions. The remaining seven positions are bench positions and can be filled with any positions. You must fill all 16 positions during the draft. After the draft, you are allowed to carry fewer than 16 players on your roster at any time. After the draft, you are not required to carry all nine starting positions at all times.

A weekly lineup consists of QB, WR, WR, RB, TE, W/T, W/R, K, and D. There is no specific deadline to have your entire roster for a week set. However, in order to start a particular player in Week A, you must have that player in the lineup prior to his team’s game during Week A.

IF/THEN RULE

Sometimes, league members have obligations which make it difficult or impossible to follow injury updates and make necessary lineup changes just before games. The Hazelweird League attempts as much as is reasonable to accommodate members when this situation arises. Typically, if a player's status is in doubt, we allow members to send a mass email to the league, along lines such as "If X plays I want to start X, but if he doesn't I want to start Y." League commissioner(s) are able to retroactively adjust lineups.

This is not a policy to be abused, and is fairly limited; we attempt to use this only for players' whose playing status is in doubt, and only when obligations prevent members from following and finding out about injuries that morning. In its limited capacity, it may be used for any game starting time or day (but is subject to the rule requiring the substitution player to play at the same time or later than the initial player).

In a "If Player X plays I'll start Player X, but if he doesn't I'll start Player Y" scenario, Player Y's game must start at the same time or later than Player X's game; you cannot substitute a player whose game occurs prior to Player X's game.

Any changes to a lineup require an If-Then list sent to the league prior to the start of a game where a player in that game will either be removed from or added to the lineup: no retroactive changes are possible without the If-Then list ahead of time. It is the responsibility of the manager to send the If-Then list if there is any possible need for a lineup change.

TEAM KICKER RULE

If you own Team X's kicker, you have the exclusive right to pick up any kicker on that team's roster at any time, and nobody else in the league may pick up a kicker from Team X.

5. Auction Draft

Auction drafts will be the preferred format of the Hazelweird League.

A manager has $300 with which to fill his 16-man roster. Bids in whole number dollar increments may not exceed the remaining dollars in a manager's account; the minimum bid for any player is $0. Any player acquired for $0 is automatically added to the winning manager's roster with no subtraction to the manager's account. If the bidding for a player exceeds (or, if another manager in the bidding reaches) a manager's remaining money, that manager is automatically out of the bidding.

The seating order will be determined by an agreed upon system at time of the draft. When seated, we will go around the table in order, with each manager throwing out a player to be bid on, with the manager starting the bidding with a minimum bid of $0. All bidding must be made in whole numbers, an increase of at least $1. You may increase the bid by more than $1.

For each new player thrown out, each manager begins with an open cup, which declares to the other managers that he is in the bidding. At any point, a manager may flip his cup upside-down, which declares him to be out of the bidding for that player. Once your cup is flipped on the bidding for Player A, you cannot re-enter the bidding for Player A. Bidding goes around the table until one manager has made a high bid, and all other managers have flipped their cups. The player being bid on goes to the manager who bid the highest amount, and that amount is subtracted from his salary cap.

Once a manager wins the auction for a player, each manager still in the auction must flip his cup back to the open side, and another player will be thrown out by the manager whose turn is next (according to the seating order, who is sitting clockwise or counterclockwise to the last manager to throw out a name).

Once the amount of the bid reaches a manager’s Maximum Bid, he is automatically removed from the bidding (he must flip his cup).

When it is your turn to throw out a player, you are allowed to pass. If a manager passes, it is the manager next to him who gets to throw out the next player. However, if all other managers in the auction pass consecutively, the first person to pass must throw out a name.

Each manager is in the bidding until his 16 position roster is filled. When your roster is filled, you are out of the auction, which continues with the remaining managers who have not yet completed their roster. Any salary cap money remaining when you fill the roster is lost.

If you attempt to throw out a player who has already been thrown out earlier and is now on a roster, you must get drinks for people for a specified amount of time (not during actual bidding).

6. Snake Draft

In the event that an Auction draft cannot be reasonably held, we will have a Snake Draft.

A snake draft “snakes” around: if you have the first pick in odd rounds, you will have the last pick in even rounds.

We will have a selection for draft order: instead of simply assigning the draft order by standings, we will allow people to choose their slot in the draft order. The order for selection is the ORDER OF THE PREVIOUS SEASON’S STANDINGS. If you won the league in Year A, you get first choice for a spot in the draft order of Year B. You select a draft slot that fits into the entire snake draft’s pattern.

Draft will last 16 rounds.

Draft picks are tradable commodities; you must have a total of 16 picks for the draft, but you may trade them prior to an agreed upon trade deadline.

If you attempt to draft a player who has already been drafted, you must get drinks for people for a specified period of time.

7. Free Agency

We will use a variation of Yahoo!'s silent auction free agency.

Starting with the regular season, once a player's game starts he goes onto waivers. The player will remain on waivers until Midnight Tuesday.

Each week, free agent money will be distributed proportionally in two ways.

A. Half the money will be distributed based on cumulative standings ($10 to last place, $9 to 9th place [...] $1 to first place).

B. Half the money will be distributed based on the previous week's finish ($10 to 0-9, $9 to 1-8 [...] $1 to 9-0).

Owners bid blindly on players (you only make one bid and then yahoo processes them on Tuesday at midnight) You can bid $0 on players during this period and you can bid the same amount on multiple players and yahoo will process based on your priority.

You can make claims on more than one player but each player claimed must also have someone dropped to acquire (so I could bid $5 for player x and then $0 for player y) but I must drop 2 different players in those claims.

Players who are dropped in Week X are not eligible to be picked up by another manager in Week X; those players become eligible for free agency the following week.

If Yahoo does not make a player eligible for the Tuesday waiver bidding (i.e., the player was dropped too late to clear midnight Tuesday waivers), that player will not be an eligible free agent for that week, including during the free for all period. The player will be an eligible free agent the following week.

After the waiver period is over it is a free for all and anyone can pick up players up until their game starts.

Money that is not used is kept in the owner's budget for future weeks (i.e., unspent money accumulates for the owner throughout the season).

Money can be included in trades.

If a player is on your roster when his team's game starts, that player is "locked in" your roster: you are not allowed to drop that player in order to pick up another player (you can drop the player, but cannot fill his empty roster spot).

PRESEASON FREE AGENCY

Each manager is granted ONE preseason free agency pickup, where he may drop a player on his roster in order to pick up a free agent player. This pick may be used at any point from the immediate completion of the draft until the beginning of the final game of week one (subject to the rule excluding from the free agent pool any player whose team's game for that week has begun). The manager may use this pick at any point for any reason, but once it is used, that manager has no more preseason free agency pickups. Preseason Free Agency picks are tradeable commodities.

Preseason Free Agent picks are tradeable commodities.

Players dropped during the preseason FA period are not eligible to be picked up until the Week One FA period.

Emergency Free Agent Picks

In rare instances, a game might be postponed on very short notice. If a manager has a starter whose team's game gets postponed, and the manager has no backup on his roster for that starter, that manager is granted EMERGENCY FREE AGENT PICKS. The manager may immediately select a free agent replacement for the postponed starter, without needing to drop player(s) to meet roster limits. That manager is REQUIRED to start the player who was selected with the emergency free agent pick that week. The manager would have until the following week's free agent period to reduce his roster to 16 players.

8. Trade

The trading period traditionally lasts from the moment the draft is over until the start of games one week after the last week including byes.

Trades may take place between any two teams. If a trade is not balanced, the team acquiring more players must immediately drop needed players to make a legal 16 player roster (i.e., if you trade one player and get three--and you did not already have open roster spots--you must cut two players, either from your existing roster or players that you just traded for).

If you trade more players for fewer players (for example, if you trade three players to get two), so that you have fewer than 16 players on your roster, you are able to make a free agent pick during the next free agency period without being required to drop somebody. You are NOT granted an immediate or extra free agent pickup to get your roster to 16 players.

9. Rule Changes

Changes to league rules are made by a democratic vote. When a rule change is proposed, everybody has a chance to make persuasive arguments to the group. If the majority of the league agrees to a rule change, the rule is changed. It is not merely a majority of people who actually vote, but a majority of the entire league required to change a rule. A person who abstains from voting on Rule Change A essentially casts a vote of “no” on Rule Change A; not voting is a vote against change.

Generally speaking, major rule changes affecting scoring system, roster requirements, or lineup requirements should not take place during season (from the beginning of the draft until the end of Week 17). Rule changes can be made at any time, but fundamental rules which would have altered a manager's actions or strategies related to the draft and/or changing and maintaining rosters should be done in the offseason.